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Richard Cox

Richard Cox

Regular Member

Assistant Professor

713-500-2514713-500-2514
[email protected]
IMM - R430D

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
McGovern Medical School
Center for Metabolic & Degenerative Diseases

The Cox Lab explores the intricate biology of pancreatic islets, which orchestrate blood glucose control, and their role in metabolism, diabetes, and obesity. At the heart of this system are the insulin-producing beta cells, whose dysfunction or loss drives both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Our mission is twofold: to uncover the molecular and cellular mechanisms that lead to beta cell death and dysfunction, and to develop pharmacologic and cellular therapies to restore functional beta cell mass.

Our research spans fundamental biology to translational approaches. We investigate how nutrient and hormone signals shape beta cell metabolism, survival, and regeneration. Current projects include: (1) transcriptional regulation of mitochondrial function, survival, and proliferation in beta cells; (2) how nutrient and inflammatory signals acting on islet delta cells shape their identity, regulate somatostatin secretion, and alter paracrine signaling within the islet; and (3) pathways that promote stem cell-derived beta cell differentiation and maturation. We also collaborate on studies of circadian regulation, viral gene delivery for beta cell expansion, and cross-organ metabolic signaling.
Graduate students in the Cox Lab will gain hands-on experience with omics technologies, confocal and electron microscopy, perifusion assays, molecular biology, and work with rodent, human, and stem cell-derived islets. Our work is supported by the NIH, Department of Defense, Breakthrough T1D, and the UT System Rising STARs program.
If you’re passionate about tackling complex biological problems with therapeutic implications, our lab offers a dynamic, collaborative environment where curiosity and creativity drive discovery.

PubMed

McGovern Medical School Faculty

Education & Training

PhD - University of Western Ontario - 2011

Research Opportunities